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Content provided by KQED News. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by KQED News or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
KQED Public Media for Northern CA
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102 episodes
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×House Republicans have laid out a blueprint for the first federal budget under President Trump’s second administration. It calls for massive tax cuts, lifting the debt ceiling and deep cuts to programs like Medicaid. Scott and Marisa talk with New York Times congressional correspondent Catie Edmondson about the politics of cutting programs for low-income Americans … Continue reading Winners and Losers in Republican Budget Blueprint →…
This comes as Dr. Bronner’s has evolved from a niche soap company to a powerhouse home brand.
Some activists are concerned about the way these plants work, and their role in the climate crisis.
How Black churches in the Bay Area are retrofitting themselves to become “resilience hubs.”
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1 NBA All-Star Game, Lunar New Year Energize This Longtime Youth Basketball Tournament in San Francisco’s Chinatown
For decades, a youth basketball tournament has been part of San Francisco’s Chinese New Year Festival, which is taking place at the same time as this year’s NBA All-Star Game at Chase Center.
As Kamala Harris considers her political future, including a possible run for governor of California, allies of President Trump are also weighing a bid for the Golden State’s top job. Scott, Marisa and Guy discuss the campaign from Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco and possibly Trump’s national security envoy Richard Grenell. Plus, are we seeing … Continue reading As Kamala Harris Mulls a Run for Governor, Trump Republicans Do Too →…
People named it “Mount Chipotle.” It was a dirt pile in the parking lot of a shopping center.
Listen to this and more in-depth storytelling by subscribing to The California Report Magazine podcast. Bay Area Japanese Americans Draw on WWII Trauma to Resist Deportation Threats February 19 is the Day of Remembrance, the anniversary of when President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which led to the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. Some survivors of those prison camps are feeling like the rhetoric about immigrants and mass deportations today is hitting too close to home. President Trump has promised to enact the largest deportation operation in U.S. history. He wants to invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, the same law that was used to justify incarcerating Japanese Americans. In response, some survivors are mobilizing to protect vulnerable immigrants. Reporter Cecilia Lei spoke to a group of them in the Bay Area about how they’re fighting to keep history from repeating itself. ‘The Poet and the Silk Girl’: A Japanese American Story of Love, Imprisonment and Protest Nine months into Satsuki Ina’s parents’ marriage, Pearl Harbor was bombed. Their life was totally upended when, along with 125,000 other Japanese Americans, they were sent to incarceration camps. After unsuccessfully fighting for their civil rights to be restored, her parents renounced their American citizenship. That meant the US government branded them as “enemy aliens.” Ina was born in a prison camp at Tule Lake, but didn’t know much about that difficult chapter in her parents’ life. Then she discovered a trove of letters that they sent to each other while they were separated in different camps. She’s written a memoir about how her parents’ relationship survived prison camps, resistance and separation. “The Poet and the Silk Girl” is a rare first-person account of a generation-altering period in Japanese American history. Sasha Khokha sat down with Satsuki Ina to learn more about her parents’ story and how it shaped the course of her own life.…
The three-day work stoppage over alleged unfair labor practices is later this month.
The flames have died down at the Moss Landing battery storage plant in Monterey County after a massive fire last month. However, the environmental impacts may be just beginning.
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